Word: blushful
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...from Anthropology 4 to Zoology 70. Almost equally various are the reasons why some particular course eclipses all others. The hour may be unusually conducive to mental concentration; Mr. So-and-So, the young assistant, may have a reputation seldom equalled, for sympathetic marking; the subject, although, at first blush unfamiliar, and geographically remote, may promise much in regions unexplored. Such arguments seem to confine themselves chiefly to underclassmen...
...epidemic of muck-raking has at last reached the college magazines, and both of our literary papers have severe attacks. The case of the "Goodies" having been exhibited, the Advocate now turns its attention to the College Chapel, and the editorial in the present issue will bring the blush to many a clerical cheek. It appears that the editors go to chapel and are bored by uninteresting sermons. Clearly the Board of Preachers must be reorganized at once...
...papers miss their mark if they do not give some stimulus to thought and offer a medium for undergraduate expression. The columns of all the papers are gaping open to any member of the University burdened with a new idea, or anything worth saying; but for some reason, we blush to suggest laziness, extraordinarily few articles are forthcoming, except from those who have to "fill" the papers for the press...
...exactly the state of mind of its constituents. The realization that it is a spokesman naturally increases the sense of responsibility of its board. One benefit has come from this for which it deserves much gratitude: the CRIMSON has almost entirely weeded out the Harvard correspondent who did not blush to send to his Boston or New York paper the most sensational "story" that he could invent, regardless of the injury it might do to the College. Now, thanks to the CRIMSON, the journalistic scavengers have to work from the outside or not at all; for they are refused access...
...those who played the trick than to see students and instructors gravely discussing the moral aspects of an affair, which, when the worst has been granted, is nothing but a "Freshman trick." When a newspaper in all solemnity declares that "the cheek of every true Harvard man should blush for shame" for such an occurrence, and that such conduct threatens the very existence of the lecture system of instruction, the affair becomes more comic than its perpetrators could possibly have hoped. When we are grave they call us stiff-necked and blase; when we come down to a perfectly harmless...